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  • The Bikery is seeking new board members

    Bikery logoThe Bikery, a non-profit community bike shop and teaching organization based between Judkins Park and the International District, is seeking two new board members. If you believe in their mission and can commit 2–6 hours per month, this could be a great way to get more involved in Seattle’s bike community. Apply by February 20 for a term through March 2025.

    More details from the Bikery:

    The Bikery is looking for two new Board members for the upcoming two-year cycle from March 2023 – March 2025!

    The Bikery is Seattle’s community, non-profit bike shop that exists so that patrons, regardless of ability, social, economic, or cultural background, are provided access to sustainable transportation through cycling and equipped with the skills to fix and build their own bicycles at a justifiable cost. More information and the application can be found here.

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  • Support an end to ‘jaywalking’ laws in Washington

    This is one part of a series about jaywalking laws in Seattle and Washington. See also: From the beginning, Seattle ‘jaywalker’ stings were used to arrest poor people and Seattle’s first jaywalking law in 1917 was part of the city’s class war.

    1939 Seattle Daily Times headline read 16 jailed in drive on jaywalkers!

    So-called ‘jaywalking’ laws in Seattle have, from the very beginning, been used as a way to arrest poor people in an effort to secure more urban space for the auto-owning class. By shifting the blame for rising traffic deaths onto the victims, the concept of jaywalking was essential in establishing a dominant car culture in Seattle and across the nation.

    But jaywalking laws never actually worked. People jaywalk all the time, and they always have. If the road is clear, you cross. But by making a common practice illegal, police officers are able to use it as a pretense to stop someone even if traffic safety isn’t their true purpose. Gene Balk at the Seattle Times found that between 2010 and 2016, 26% of jaywalking citations went to Black people despite Black people making up only 7% of the population. And these figures don’t even account for all the stops that don’t result in a citation. As we have seen time and again, even low-level police stops can quickly escalate into police violence.

    However, the era of jaywalking laws may be on its way out. States and cities across the nation have started repealing jaywalking laws, including the states of Virginia and Nevada in 2021. Now Washington could join them if HB 1428 or its companion bill SB 5383 become law this session. The House Transportation Committee is holding a hearing on HB 1428 4 p.m. tomorrow (February 8). You can go on the record as “pro” on the bill at any time using the state’s online testimony page even if you cannot make it to the hearing. Transportation Choices Coalition has also put together a handy online form you can use to send messages to House and Senate lawmakers explaining your support for the effort.

    The bill does not give people free reign to walk in roadways whenever they want. People are still required to “exercise due care for their safety.” Specifically, the bill would add a section to the state traffic code stating:

    A pedestrian may cross a roadway at any point unless a reasonably careful person would realize there is an immediate danger of a collision with a moving vehicle, a person operating a bicycle, or personal delivery device. This subsection does not relieve a pedestrian from the duty of exercising due care for their safety or relieve a driver of a vehicle, a person operating a bicycle, or personal delivery device from the duty of exercising due care for the safety of any pedestrian within the roadway.

    And, though it’s depressing to put it this way, there is still a serious potential penalty for crossing the road in a dangerous manor: Death and injury. Everyone is already quite aware of the danger of cars, and that real and immediate danger is a much bigger deterrent than the relatively rare chance that a police officer might give someone a ticket (Seattle Police issued 160 jaywalking tickets in all of 2016, likely equal to the number of people who jaywalk every couple minutes across the city). But at least with this bill, police won’t visit someone on their hospital bed to write them a ticket.

    Revising the state’s jaywalking law is only one action among many that are needed to address the state’s rising traffic death numbers. Washington needs to stop offloading the blame onto the victims of traffic violence and instead seek real solutions, especially roadway engineering changes and auto industry regulations, to make our streets and highways safer.

    Transportation Choices Coalition has more information supporting the repeal of Washington’s “jaywalking” law.

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  • Seattle’s first jaywalking law in 1917 was part of the city’s class war

    This is one part of a series about jaywalking laws in Seattle and Washington. See also: From the beginning, Seattle ‘jaywalker’ stings were used to arrest poor people and Support an end to ‘jaywalking’ laws in Washington.

    Old headline: Stringent traffic code effective in Seattle - Responsibility for safety largely placed upon pedestrian-"Jaywalking" barred by heavy penalty
    From the July 6, 1917, edition of the Seattle Daily Times.

    The day before a new downtown Seattle jaywalking law went into effect July 7, 1917, a Seattle Daily Times reporter wrote (PDF):

    Just suppose a man were hit by an automobile in the downtown business district while crossing the street diagonally—which method of crossing is prohibited in the new code. While he is lying in the hospital watching the various portions of his anatomy reunite some judge may decide that he was to blame for the accident. Then, along with the hospital, nurse, medicine and doctor bills the would have to contribute a small sum—even up to $100—for the privilege of being hurt.

    The same traffic code revision making jaywalking illegal also made it illegal to feed your horse on 2nd Avenue without a feed bag to catch the crumbs.

    But while the Seattle Daily Times reporter noted the absurdity of the new law in 1917, the paper’s Editorial Board saw a happy victory for the wealthy in the city’s ongoing class war, writing (PDF):

    There are some persons in the world who think that the man who holds more than a dollar and fifty cents in cash in his own name is a crook and a robber and entitled to all the abuse that can be heaped upon him. There are others who think the man who owns an automobile is a “highway baron” who lays claim to ownership of all the roads and whose special delight in life is tooting his horn to make the crawling pedestrian jump. Perhaps there are not many who take so radical a view, but they represent a class whose ideas on the subject of the ownership of money and automobiles are almost as ridiculous.

    And what a feeling of resentment will stir within them tomorrow when the new ordinance becomes effective governing the rights of pedestrians on the public streets. This class has claimed for itself all those rights it has condemned the auto owner for claiming—and more. Now, however, the pedestrian is going to have to obey some traffic rules.

    The honest man will take a common-sense view of these regulations, realizing that they are as important and as justifiable as those intended to govern the automobile driver. The man with an automobile doesn’t get his greatest enjoyment out of running over somebody any more than does the pedestrian in being run over. Seattle is becoming a very large city and its traffic problem is becoming a serious one. There is no reason why the pedestrian should be granted rights that do not extend to the autoist. Hereafter he will be busy watching his own step and will not have so much time to stand in the middle of the street and grin at the auto owner who is being reprimanded for attempting to run by a signal.

    The regulations governing foot traffic are in the interests of safety and will be recognized by fair-minded citizens.

    The editorial shows that even from the start jaywalking laws were about shifting power in public space in favor of the auto-owing class with safety concerns sort of tacked on as an afterthought and justification. It’s worth noting that this editorial was written just one and a half years before the Seattle General Strike, and automobiles were still quite expensive and out of reach for most people a the time. As the editorial gleefully acknowledges, jaywalking laws were one more way for the privileged to assert their power over the working class.

    It is a sick irony that at the same moment that American soldiers were taking their first steps in France to put their bodies in the path of Germany’s deadly war machines, people walking on the streets of Seattle were also losing their rights against machines of violence at home. It reminds me of Pino Pascali’s 1966 sculpture Machine Gun, which is made from automobile parts.

    The idea that deadly machines and humans of flesh and blood share equal responsibility for roadway safety has always been a farce.

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  • Thanks to years of delays, Seattle has 2 years to build 47 miles of voter-approved bike routes

    Stacked bar chart titled "projected bike facilities constructed with levy dollars." The goal was 110, of which 62.65 have been constructed to date. The Constructed and Planned bar shows 90 to 107 miles.
    Charts from a planned SDOT presentation to the Move Seattle Levy Oversight Committee (PDF).

    Seattle voters overwhelmingly approved a taxing levy in 2015 with the stated goal of building 110 miles of new or upgraded protected bike lanes and neighborhood greenways across the city by the end of 2024. As of the start of 2023, the city has only constructed 57% of that goal, according to a presentation SDOT is set to give the Move Seattle Levy Oversight Committee tomorrow (February 7).

    But we already knew the city was behind on delivering its bike promises. We’ve unfortunately been tracking this problem since the very first year of the levy. After leading the development and passage of the levy, Mayor Ed Murray dropped the ball badly in 2016 and into 2017 before resigning in disgrace amid accusations of sexual abuse. At the time, SDOT placed blame for the bike project delays on “various reasons” and told Seattle Bike Blog that they had a plan to make sure bike route delivery stayed on schedule in the coming years:

    “We recognize projects get delayed for various reasons and to that end, are planning and designing additional 2017 and 2018 projects to prepare for schedule risks,” said [SDOT Spokesperson Norm] Mah. “By planning and designing more mileage then we can accommodate delays in some projects and move enough corridors forward to make up for delays in others.”

    Chart of the bicycle safety program deliverables to-date showing miles constructed per year.In order to deliver on Move Seattle, SDOT would need to build an average of 12 miles of protected bike lanes and neighborhood greenways every year. But after a slow start, that number ticked up to about 13 miles per year in 2017, then 14 miles per year in 2018. Seattle would need strong leadership to get the voter-mandated bike routes back on track, but instead Jenny Durkan became mayor.  By the end of her first full year in office she still had not hired an SDOT Director, and Seattle had successfully constructed just 4% of its 2018 bike lane goal. The miles needed per year to meet the Move Seattle goal ticked up to 15.5, but Durkan had made it clear by this point that she was not interested in pursuing the levy’s bike route goals, and the Levy Oversight Committee sounded the alarm about the “disproportionately large” cuts to the bike plan. Hundreds of people protested the bike cuts during a June 2019 City Hall rally and bike ride downtown.

    By the time the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the voters’ bike route plan already seemed unlikely. Understandably, the city’s delivery of bike infrastructure took a hard hit in 2020. Going into 2021, the city would need to build 18.5 miles per year to meet the levy’s goal.

    But this is where things got really interesting. 2021 was SDOT Director Sam Zimbabwe’s first year to actually run the department without being in total crisis response mode, and SDOT delivered 16.73 miles of bike routes, 9 of which were difficult-to-build protected bike lanes. That was within spitting distance of the mileage the department would need to deliver every year to meet the levy’s goal. The turnaround was astounding, and it showed what the department is capable of when given the proper guidance and resources. It also completed some notoriously difficult and important connections, especially in and around downtown. (more…)

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  • SDOT will make some safety improvements to 15th Ave S as they work on bike lane design

    Map of the spring improvements on 15th Ave S, showing locations of speed cushions, curb bulbs and a new flashing beacon at 14th Ave S.After community feedback, SDOT will move to slow traffic speeds on 15th Ave S on Beacon Hill in the spring while the project moves through the design process. The department will install a series of speed cushions as well as curb bulbs and visibility improvements, they noted in a blog post.

    The team also released the results of a public survey about the project, which found considerable support for one-way bike lanes on each side of 15th Ave S. It also found that the 604 respondents (80% of whom live in SE Seattle) want to bike more and drive less than they do currently:

    Chart showing 71% currently drive regularly in the area while 68% bike. Chart showing only 36% of people want to be driving in the area while 80% want to be biking.It’s both hopeful and depressing to look at these two charts. Look at all those people who feel stuck inside their cars even though they really just want to bike. Safe bike lanes will be an instant success on 15th Ave S and Beacon Ave S once they are open.

    The most popular design option for the bike lanes was one-way lanes on each side of the street with about half of respondents saying they preferred that option. About a quarter preferred a two-way bikeway and another 20% did not have a preference. We noted in a post focused on the one-way vs two-way decision and in our deep dive into the early design concepts that there are potential compromises either way, but that one-way lanes are generally preferred unless there is a compelling reason to build a two-way lane (like if one side has far fewer driveways, for example). (more…)

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  • Vote YES on I-135 for social housing in Seattle

    Social housing is not a panacea for Seattle’s ongoing housing affordability crisis. But it is one more tool the city can use to help alleviate ever-climbing rental prices. We need every possible solution we can get our hands on if our city ever hopes to be a more affordable place to live.

    Vote YES on I-135. Ballots are due February 14, and this one only has this single issue, making it the easiest ballot to complete in years.

    The social housing concept is simple. If a public agency were in charge of leasing more homes, then fewer people would be harmed or trapped by the exploitative rents charged by for-profit landlords and, increasingly, rental market speculation companies. There are plenty of cities around the world where a lot of the housing available for rent is owned and operated by a public agency, but the concept is somewhat unfamiliar around these parts. This is a chance for Seattle to be a leader.

    I-135 does not include funding (state law prohibits ballot measures from doing multiple things in the same initiative). Instead, it would create the Seattle Social Housing Developer, a new public agency with the power to buy, build and maintain housing. Efforts to fund the agency’s work would need to come in a future step. So let’s approve I-135 to get the agency on its feet.

    Seattle Neighborhood Greenways is hosting a volunteer phone bank to get out the vote for I-135 starting 6 p.m. February 6. It’s virtual, so you can participate remotely.

    Here’s a video from the House Our Neighbors campaign explaining how the finances would work:

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